prompt for self & test of using site. ” published” 7/30/2017 Eastern time.

Preparation for the marathon, Saturday July 29, 2017, also printed on comments in another section.

A prompt for myself for the marathon
Poetry and facebook have many sides.
Two in particular, or should I say peculiar?
On one hand there are puppies and cats,
and restaurant food.
cute videos of fun times and hilarity.
Sweet notes of support and love and friendship.
The Human Connection at its best.
On the other hand, you have thunder and lightening,
dialog carried out with all the subtlety of a 2×4 to the head.
The storms of the inner self
crying for attention.
Both worlds deserve our attention and are fit subjects.

not making poetry anymore

unless you count

rap

spoken word

spoken word

greeting cards

middle schoolers writing haiku

people who actually make their livings teaching poetry

Open mic and online poets

and the family of those who “are a poet and didn’t know it.”

Saving the last for last.

Ultimacy is more unusual than we suspect,

and seldom announced as clearly as we need.

The last day of school is memorable,

but   the last you made love before the breakup may have missed notice.

Who can remember the last time they walked the dog at the old house,

or the last long trip in the old car before we found out it wouldn’t make another one.

 

It is really sort of artificial to say “this is it, this is final, it is all over and done.”

We crave that kind of tidiness and even imagine we have it , but it is actually very rare,

Or perhaps I am running away with my own conceit.

Perhaps most people pay attention much better than I do to these punctuationsin the minor rhythms of life.

I know we don’t talk about it much,

Although we all remember Appommatix and inaugurations, we don’t remember the last day of the incumbent as well a they do.

So, we have a brisk business in greeting cards imploring us to pay attention to the moments of our lives as they pass.

As they pass.

As they pass.

The Kitchen at Exit to Oakland

It isn’t the number of people that determines the number of  refrigerators,

It’s the number of households,

Or, to put it another way,

The number of Moms.

One mom can set up the rules for a single refrigerator for the clan,

but that requires discipline and order.

Kristen needs to fill every available space in a  refrigerator,

Which makes it hard to share to start with,

and a teenager adds a wild card.

Jasmine’s hobby of throwing out  all her fresh vegetables when a few were tainted was spin,

and the day somebody threw George’s food in the trash

because, presumably, it looked old and unfamiliar,

showed you need empty space, margins, if the food is not there for everyone.

 

The microwave is a hoot.

Paul puts things in to heat and forgets them,

Others come down and find tepid water

in a ding ding dinging unit

While Paul sits unperturvbed and unheading

typing at the kitchen trable.

The six inches of counterspace in front of the microwave

is  hotly contested for use because it is also on the path from refrigerator to stove.

Put something here and you can’t open the micro.

But we managed pretty well, considering.

 

The sink is a mystery.

Paul, drought conscious,

stands by helplessly as people rinse and rinse and rinse and clean water goes down the drain.

Paul, who saves his bath water for flushing and watering,

When the dishpan was full of hot soapy water, dishes got washed and stacked into a magic mountain on the drying rack,

Precariously growing as one oddball  thingus after another took up permanent residence.

Otherwise dishes could stack up

and were washed by pouring detergent directly on them,

requiring more water to rinse escape down the drain and into the sewers.

Kristen’s mojo requires washing the dishes clean,

arranging them in the  dishwasher and washing them again.

“The spirit of her Austrian mother haunts her and drives her in this.

 

Much could be told of the trash,

the separation into compost, recycle, and garbage,

and the need to keep tasty treats out of the garbage and into a smaller can with a lid.

Dogs otherwise unexpectedly emptied the  garbage and spread it around the downstairs,

on an intermittent reinforcement schedule,

Which basically means without warning.

 

The stove was home to serious but unscheduled cooking of viands of  all kinds of smells.

The smell of cookincooker has no pilot light,

g goes right up the stairs to the second floor,ccwhich is either homey or something else, depending on your taste.

Somebody left the electric sparker on and burned it out, so one burner has not pilot light,

a risk you assume when you have humans and teenagers in the home.

 

We didn’t know anybody felt crowded out until we reduced the population from six to four and George started cooking every day.

All in all, schedules matched and mismatched so that there was little competition for kitchen time,

Remarkable in itself,

although the day the adult tried to retrain the teenager in how to boil an egg was hard to refrain from comment.

 

If time allows, we shold think of the island,

a generous sweep of granite topped counterspace

which form time to time had so much fruit and veggies and such piled on it that it was a home for fruit flies.

but its highest and best use was for the buffets Kristen stocked

whenever we had comedy shoes on the stage,

which was, in essence, at the other end of the large room

which contaiThned the kitchen with no intervening walls.

 

The home was chosen for its capacity for  home shows, but that would be stretching the kitchen metphorically and literally to examine those in  depth.

Cabinet space seems plentiful, but again when there are  four each bottles of olive oil, soy sauce, vinegar, and what not,  the need for cupboards is infinite.li

Stashed below the counters were pots and pans of many and varied sizes, that nobody clearly remembered ownership and orgin, and that caused no problem at all, if memory serves.

 

OVerhead was a large flourescent  light which was bright enough that nobody noticed that  it was dark on the counters under the cupboard, except Paul, who used to do lights in theater and was always crazed about shadows and bright spots.

Of course all the available couner space was cluttered with not only the microwave but  toaster, juicer,  a holder for the big knives, big spoons, and all the things we take for granted in a modern kitchen, which grew there organically as the countertop gave birth to them one by one.

Paul had wisely left it to Jazz and Kristen to negotiate the kitchen, being the two moms of the household,

so  dishtowels and the silverware drawer and garbage liners simply were  wherever they belonged and maintained themselves by some mystery of ecology never revealed.

there are three bathrooms in that house, with four people sharing one of them, a man and a family of three women,so it is magical that there were no wars, but that is not  our subject today,

Nor the garage crammed with items not yet unpacked from moving three years ago.

 

Nobody starved, sometimes food was shared and there was takeout, so the kitchen was interesting but not an epic feature.

 

 

 

 

RU BRAGGIN’ er COMPLAININ’?

I’m not a fan of introductions to literature.  I figure the piece  ought to speak for itself, but I want to offer a kind of apology for this one.  I tried some 12 step meetings, even led a co-morbidity group for addicted mentally ill folks like me, but my needs and culture never meshed well, and here is some cheap revenge.

Marathon around hour 10 or 11

RU BRAGGIN’ er COMPLAININ’ ?

You got so drunk you smashed your daddy’s pickup…

classic hubs and custom gunrack

waxed and polished every Sunday

stainless toolbox in the back

stars and bars on the license plate

…through the front of the Wyn Dixie..

giant slushies two bucks

live bait and licenses

“Make America Great Again” hats

on the shelf with the

“all lives matter, asshole” t shirts

…. and damn near killed Sam, the clerk…

forty stitches and two steel pins

….. and put a scar on your best girl;s left tit…

Under the death;s head skull

boy, she was royally pissed..

… and walked five and a quarter miles on a broken leg ….

charged with leaving the scene

thewn in the pokey

the judge, Uncle Earnie was pissed

…. got this scar..

and lost my job

and my left nut

but that was in the fight with the depity sherrif

and not technically in the crash.

Trust me, you don’t want to see

…. 6 months and a fine..

….. and will you sign that I made the meeting today?

I wrote this for week 10, 11 or 12 and never posted it correctly. Thought I ought to at least get it posted someplace and fix it up later…..

 

At the Diner

Denny’s, America’s Diner

Kristen and I go there for privacy

To discuss the drama in the house

To plot the revolution

To find a way to take back our home

From the Lodgers we had invited in.

I always order, except when I don’t

The Everyday Slam (which sounds like a punk dance)

Whole wheat pancakes

Sugarless Syrup

Sausage,not bacon

Bacon isn’t really food I say,

to Kristen’s annoyance.

She likes the taste of bacon

but won’t let me get it for her.

Scrambled eggs with steak sauce instead of Ketchup.

Just to class things up.

Over the years we have seen the economy change

The servers are newer hires who don’t last as long as the veterans,

Who moved on after their hours were cut.

To avoid giving them bennies.

Now the dramatic couple  and their sweet teenager are gone,

Replaced by an quiet, amiable fellow

The house is quiet.

We eat at home more.

Especially since my blood sugar edged up.

I no longer eat pancakes.

Denny’s, America’s Diner.”

Somehow we caught on

The food wasn’t that great,

nor the service

nor the atmosphere,

It was the company we kept all along.

Rice Paddies

For a considerable chunk of my life

The years when I was formed

High school to young adulthood,

The time to dream dreams and hope to get laid,

All us tender white boys were obsessed with staying out of the rice paddies of Viet Nam.

Our draft lottery numbers were our horoscopes on steroids.

We saw villages burn and marched in the streets.

Patriotism gave way to anger and fear and disgust,

Something broke inside us as a people.

The carnage of WW Two the big one

Was across some mystic bridge to be viewed with approval,

While the Greatest Nation On Earth

Dropped death from the sky on children on television,

and we hardened our hearts.

We hardened our hearts, to save us from self-loathing and despair.

But failed and did not know it.

We became hard and hopeless and cynical like some European,

Pragmatic as Stalin,

Blind to nuances as moles.

 

 

 

 

CHUMP CHANGE

Why is Donald Trump willing to take a pay cut to have power and prestige?

Working for chump change?

Running for President was a good strategy for selling the book he didn’t write.

What now?

Did he lose a game of truth or dare and the dare was to run for president?

The chumps that will not change are the American People –

H.L Menken called us the “boobocracy”

Nobody ever went broke underestimating our intelligence.

There’s a sucker born every minute.

Ha Ha.

How cleverly we make our wry, detached comments,

Showing our superior detachment and philosophical control,

As the ship of state sinks.

Now that people know crazy lies and hate mongering sells, we will have it  back again.

The people who called Lincoln a monkey will have access to youtube and go on CNN for interviews.

Other reality TV stars will run of office, and eventually some will win,

And we might not notice the difference,

As the sideshow distracts us from the drowning earth,

The bodies riddled with bullets,

The jobless young black men fermenting in rage on the corners.

The billionaires playing us for suckers

Playing us off against each other.

The disabled against reproductive freedom,

Unions, the source of the middle class, against the middle  class.

Shut your eyes real real tight and look.

The strange orange man is still there,

and Republicans, selling their souls for victory,

have not disavowed him.

And someone, reading these words, will find the controversial.

“Yeh, but Hillary the liar who ordered the hit on Benghazi”

they begin.

Truth is split  into two camps,

Held hostage by ideology,

The facts themselves are for sale.

In fifty years the low areas of Oakland will be underwater.

Fortunately, in the eyes of those in a position to stop it,

Those areas are not the best part of town.

Let’s not let these things upset us, though,

As long as the cable and the internet are working.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Purple Reign

Red and blue lights flash together

Melding to purple as they come through the faux fine glass in our front door.

Nothing more common than a traffic stop,

Here where six lanes of Brush Street Parallel the chunk of I980

Connecting Grand with the Exit to Oakland for which we named our faux Victorian manse.

The state police – the highway patrol-  frequent the curb beneath our kitchen window for their traffic stops,

Bringing annoyed surprised abashed or sleepy drivers from the maze of concrete highways and onramps just down the road called, not surprisingly, “THE MAZE”

The supposition being that if they are hit by a bad driver here they will be going more slowly, not always a good supposition.

Our corner has an accident every month,

The overpass on 18th draws impatient drivers from uptown over one of  few passages over the freeway,

The light goes quickly from yellow to red, and the speeders coming off the freeway are caught by surprise,

So we hear the sound of sheet metal deforming quickly,

A garage door slamming in the middle of the street.

But the police never come for something as minor as an accident,

and the reign of purple lights has lasted to long.

I step out on my generous, old fashioned covered porch,

Three steps up from the litter on the sidewalk,

to see the OPD SUV blocking 18th at the East-South corner of  my house.

lights flashing their fancy and unmistakeable dance not quite in sychrony with another vehicle a block away in either direction.

Trapped!

Kristen, in her pastel blue flowered house dress is getting her phone from her van,

and one of the young officers , solicitously asks if we want to get out as I approach him.

He and his partner, both slightly above middle height, slim, fit, stand by their vehicle like valets in a parking lot,

casual and relatively alert, slightly more than the security guard at the 99c store, who actually is bothered by people.

Here, in the dark of the night, nobody stirs

Our neighbors in their two story  semi-Victorian two story duplexes and single family homes – this is a historical district with distinctive but not expensive architecture- have their lights out and are not stirring abroad in troubled times like the crazy old white man on the corner-

Evidently there is a suspect with a gun,\

But the officers seem relaxed enough that I assume it is at the other end of the block.

They chat amiably enough but are not forthcoming about details, except they agree with Kristen that I should repair to my lair.

I’m supposed to be getting sleep for a poetry marathon,

I hope i hope i hope.

The lights go on changing even though there is no traffic moving,

so for now there are no collisions at our corner, not tonight.

The three working street lights make the scene as bright as, well as bright as a semi-urban intersection late at night,

bright enough to show the variety in tone of the paint used to deface the graffitti on our neighbor’s plastic slats in their forbiddingly institutional chain link fence.

The air is quiet and a bit chill for August in California.

So it is not a long hot summer,

but as I reflect on the scene I see the two light skinned young men standing by their bloated shiny black vehicle, that one of them might have been one of the minority hires that Oakland has proudly hired, but neither of them was black like my neighbors, who have lived there 30 years and view the geriatrification of a couple of retired white folks moving in with friendly diffidence.

The purple light had its reign for some time afterwards, shining in through the front door as though Stevie Speilberg  had staged it, but no space craft landed,

This time,

Only the cheerful occupational forces of the local gov’t.